Kombrig Mikhail Andreevich Pronin was given command of the 144th on the day it began forming in
Ivanovo Oblast of the Moscow Military District. He had previously led the 175th Rifle Regiment of the
1st Moscow Proletarian Rifle Division. His rank would be modernized to that of major general on June 4, 1940. At the start of the German invasion the division was still in Ivanovo Oblast, under 20th Army of the Reserve of the
STAVKA High Command, in
61st Rifle Corps with
110th and
172nd Rifle Divisions. Its order of battle was as follows: • 449th Rifle Regiment • 612th Rifle Regiment • 785th Rifle Regiment • 308th Artillery Regiment • 270th Antitank Battalion • 158th Reconnaissance Company • 226th Sapper Battalion (later 310th) • 217th Signal Battalion (later 217th Signal Company) • 205th Medical/Sanitation Battalion (later 50th) • 86th Chemical Defense (Anti-gas) Company • 155th Motor Transport Company (later 228th) • 284th Field Bakery • 193rd Divisional Veterinary Hospital • 926th Field Postal Station • 656th Field Office of the State Bank As of July 1 the 144th was still in the Reserve, but now as part of the separate
20th Rifle Corps with the
160th Rifle Division. It was already moving west, where on July 2 it rejoined 20th Army as a separate division. The Army was now under command of Western Front. In a July 27 report by Lt. Gen.
P. A. Kurochkin he described the state of some of his units as they arrived at the fighting front:The report further stated the Army's signal units had only 25-30 percent of their communications equipment and transport. On the same day the 144th rejoined the Army, it was struck by elements of German
4th Army.
Battle of Smolensk 20th Army was now part of the Group of Reserve Armies which had been assigned to Western Front and it had been ordered to prepare defenses along a sector on the approaches to Orsha. The Front was now under command of Marshal
S. K. Timoshenko; he quickly assigned the 5th and
7th Mechanized Corps, with a total of over 1,500 tanks, to the support of the Army. At 0030 hours on July 5, as directed by Timoshenko, General Kurochkin ordered his Army to "prepare and conduct an attack against the flank and rear of the enemy grouping operating along the
Polotsk axis." This counterblow effectively came to nothing apart heavy losses in tanks. By July 12 the 144th was attempting to hold crossings over the Dniepr River in the sector from Rossasna to Klimenki. Meanwhile Timoshenko was planning a massive counteroffensive scheduled to begin the next day in which 20th Army would destroy the German forces that had crossed the Dniepr near
Astroŭna. Given the actual situation, no part of Timoshenko's plan was even remotely feasible. The next day the Marshal modified his directions to the Army; it was now to liquidate the penetrations in the
Orsha and
Shklow areas by the end of July 16 but this was no more realistic. In heavy fighting on July 15 the
17th Panzer Division captured Orsha and, together with much of the rest of
2nd Panzer Group, drove the bulk of 20th and
19th Armies, including the 144th and up to 19 other divisions of various types, into an elongated pocket along and north of the Dniepr west of Smolensk. Despite this, Timoshenko was able to report on July 16 at 2000 hours that the division, now part of
69th Rifle Corps of 20th Army, had "seized
Lyady from two companies of enemy infantry and 5-7 tanks" with an advanced battalion. In a further report two days later the stated, in part:Kurochkin was by now in command of all forces in the pocket and set about regrouping his units so as to keep in contact with Group
Rokossovskii, which was holding open the line of communications to the east. Timoshenko's next report at 0800 hours on July 21 first asserted that Western Front's forces "continued to conduct sustained fighting with enemy units..." before specifically stating:In a further report at 2000 hours on July 23, 20th Army was said to have regrouped to attack the German forces penetrating toward the city while also defending the north bank of the Dniepr, while the 144th had been hit by sustained ground and air attacks, after which it had withdrawn to a line from Molevo Boloto to Bolshaya Ploskaya Station by 1100 on July 22. It was at about this time that the 270th Antitank Battalion was removed from the division in order to help form a separate antitank regiment within the Army. As the fighting continued Army Group Center was determined to disengage its panzer divisions to forestall further Red Army counterattacks from the east and to, hopefully, restore momentum to the drive on Moscow. Infantry corps had begun arriving in the area on July 18 and the panzers began moving on July 23, barely anticipating Timoshenko's new counteroffensive which would be led by 20 divisions of the
Front of the Reserve Armies. It was crucial to the plan that the
16th,
19th, and 20th Armies in the pocket remain in the fight. Timoshenko directed that the 16th and 20th, both now under Kurochkin's overall command, retake Smolensk while also making local attacks on the perimeter to try to link up with the advancing groups of Reserve Front. The counterstroke began on a staggered fashion on July 23, with the full 20 divisions committed only two days later. Timoshenko again reported to the
STAVKA on July 24 in optimistic terms. 20th Army was said to be "repulsing attacks by up to 7 enemy divisions, defeated two German divisions, including
5th ID attacking toward Rudnya with three volleys of
Katyushas..." At 2100 hours the next day Kurochkin stated that 20th Army was "defending and preventing an enemy penetration to Smolensk", and 69th Corps (now containing the 144th and 229th) was:The headquarters of Western Front signaled at 0800 on July 26 that the 144th, 153rd, and 57th Tanks were engaged in day and night fighting with 5th Infantry. General Pronin received orders to withdraw his division into Army reserve overnight on July 26/27 to the Matyushino, Zamoshe, and Kozarevo area, 8-10km north-northeast of Smolensk, with the 153rd covering the move. Despite these reports the pocket was shrinking, and by July 27 the counteroffensive was waning. The Front of the Reserve Armies was reorganized into
Reserve Front on July 30, with Army Gen.
G. K. Zhukov in command. On July 26 Kurochkin had prepared a strength return which stated the 144th had 30 artillery pieces remaining, roughly average for his Army's rifle divisions at that point. At the same time he recommended that his Army could prevent a German advance from north of the pocket with the 73rd, 153rd, and 144th while the remainder attacked the flank and rear of
7th Panzer Division at Dukhovshchina in an effort to keep the pocket open in cooperation with Group Rokossovskii. As of August 1, 69th Corps had the 73rd, 144th and
233rd Rifle Divisions under command. 20th Army, however, was down to some 40,000 personnel, of which about one-third were "bayonets" (riflemen and sappers), facing double the number of German troops. In the previous days the 144th, 233rd and 1st Motorized had halted the
15th Infantry Division along the line they held. Despite the best efforts of 17th and 7th Panzers, Group Rokossovskii (now called Group
Yartsevo) maintained a 10km-wide gap in the outer encirclement line from north of Ratchino on the Dniepr to Malinovka. It was now clear that 16th and 20th Armies would not survive unless reinforced or withdrawn. The pocket had shrunken in size to 20km east to west and 28km north to south and contained fewer than 100,000 men who were running out of all supplies. Kurochkin ordered at 1930 hours on August 2 that 69th Corps (now the 144th and 153rd) was to defend the line of the Khmost River with part of its forces by 0400 on August 3 while also conducting a mobile defense along the Nadva and Orleya in an effort to reach the Dniepr crossings, then take up defenses along that river from Zabore to the mouth of the Ustrom by 0500 on August 4. Rear services were to precede this move. Kurochkin made clear to all his commanders:The withdrawal began in earnest overnight on August 2/3, engaging outposts manned in company strength by forces of
20th Motorized Division. Those units that could not find the gap near Ratchino faced the riskier prospect of penetrating or infiltrating through this defensive cordon. Timoshenko's operational summary of 2000 hours, August 3, stated in part that 20th and 16th Armies were "conducting rear guard actions" along the Khmost to the Dniepr at Malinovka and were being resupplied on the west bank of the latter. The retreating troops fended off pickets of 17th Panzer and were forced to run a gauntlet through the corridor, often under artillery fire and air strikes, fording the Dniepr wherever it was less than 60cm deep. The breakout lasted just over 48 hours, ending by dawn on August 5. 20th Army's forces were now ordered to pull back to the
Dorogobuzh area for rest and refitting. At this time the 144th had just 440 "bayonets" remaining, although individuals and small groups would filter out of the pocket during the coming weeks. Rebuilding began immediately, still in 20th Army, and by August 15 the division had 559 officers, 626 NCOs, and 3,352 other ranks plus 1,000 new recruits. Armaments were as follow: 3,353 rifles; 46
sub-machine guns; 30
heavy machine guns; 53
light machine guns; one
antiaircraft machine gun; one
45mm antitank gun plus four 12.7mm machine guns on the antitank role; three
76mm cannon; three
122mm howitzers; three
122mm cannon; five
50mm, 12
82mm, and two
120mm mortars.
Dukhovshchina Offensives 20th Army had come under command of Lt. Gen.
M. F. Lukin on August 6. From August 9-15 the main forces of the Army were engaged in an offensive to tie down German forces on the west bank of the Dniepr. The 144th- At the end of this period the division was reported as being on a line from Korovniki to Osova, but still with two battalion-size detachments on the west bank of the Dniepr. Marshal Timoshenko was aiming to cut German communications between Dukhovshchina and
Yelnya with 20th Army in support of 19th Army. At noon on August 15 he submitted a proposal to Stalin "to prevent the enemy from restoring order in his units, and also to destroy the enemy grouping in the Dukhovshchina region." 20th Army was to carry on its assigned missions while making preparations to exploit any gains made by 19th Army. The offensive was to begin on August 17. Lukin issued his orders at 1430 hours on August 16. The 144th was to defend the Dniepr from Solovevo south to a wood 2km east of Lagunovo, maintaining forward detachments at Makeevo, Pnevo, and Mitkovo, and also relieving the 153rd Division from the Dniepr bend to the wood overnight on August 17/18. Western Front reported at 0800 hours on August 17 that "the offensive by 20th Army on the left wing is developing slowly against stubborn enemy resistance." At the same time it was still withdrawing artillery, vehicles, and equipment in small quantities across the Dniepr. At 1800 Timoshenko ordered Lukin to resume the attack, but this did not include the 144th, which was fortifying its scant holdings on the west bank. The orders for the next day again directed the division against Mitkovo. All this activity was a contingency to allow an advance on Dukhovshchina from the south in case of success by 19th Army. The 144th was reported as fighting with its forward units from south of Makeevo to a farm west of Marker 165.9 and to a ravine south of Mitkovo, with its main forces in combat on a sector from west of Korovniki to Marker 195.6, while taking "intense artillery fire from Makeevo, Pnevo, and Liakhovo." On August 19 the division made another attack which failed to take Mitkovo. In an August 20 report on the fighting at Makeevo the 144th's opponent was identified as the
2nd SS Motorized Division Das Reich. This confrontation continued the following day. 20th Army was expected to attack again at 0900 hours on August 22 in an effort to reach the Khmost River, with the 144th now attacking Mitkovo again. At this point the
3rd Panzer Group was unleashed against
22nd Army on Western Front's right flank near
Velikiye Luki, which would create a crisis forcing the end of the offensive on Dukhovshchina. 20th Army would attack again on August 23 with every intention of continuing on the next, although the division was now defending against German attacks from Solovevo. Its situation did not change on August 24. The 144th was now to be transferred to 16th Army, which was given orders to go over to the defense until August 30; at this time the division was go on a general offensive with three other divisions. Prior to this shift, it remained in its previous positions with the 73rd Division, and on August 26 the 308th Artillery Regiment was said to have destroyed one machine gun emplacement and suppressed two German batteries near Skrushevo. The next day the two divisions continued to hold their ground, conduct reconnaissance, and exchange artillery fire. By August 28 the transfer was cancelled as Lukin was ordered to form a shock group of six divisions to begin a new offensive to envelop Smolensk from the south beginning on September 1. This was to kick off at 1000 hours, again with the initial objective of reaching the Khmost. The 144th would have the support of a battalion of the 592nd Gun Artillery Regiment, was first to take over part of the sector of the 153rd, and then:The Army's engineers were to construct two bridges over the Dniepr in the division's sector by 0300. Altogether the six divisions fielded some 25,000 men, but no tanks, while about 8,000 German troops defended. When the offensive began 20th Army was facing the
8th Infantry Division of
VIII Army Corps, while 2nd SS had been moved back to the reserve. At the outset the 144th ran into heavy fire from Pnevo and intense resistance at Lyakhovo which halted its advance and forced it to dig in 1,000m east of Skrushevo to 200m east of Pnevo and 1,000m northeast of Mitkovo and Lyakhovo. The next day the best the Army's shock group could do was to exchange fire and make minimal advances. For September 3 the division, less the 449th Rifle Regiment (protecting the Army's right flank), was to take Pnevo with two battalions, plus Mitkovo by attacking from the east and northeast with one regiment, and also prepare to attack Mashkino. During the day it, and the 153rd, pushed at Mitkovo repeatedly without success, which continued on September 4. For September 6, Pronin received the following orders as the offensive ran down on this front:Overnight on September 7/8 the regiment of the 153rd was to be released so it could concentrate in the rear with the rest of its division. As of the beginning of September 9 the 144th was reported as defending between Buyanovo and Osova on the east bank of the Dniepr. == Operation Typhoon ==